“…In brief, research that has examined adult rape cases with a female victim and a male perpetrator indicates that men tend to blame victims more, identify and empathize with victims less, and attribute greater responsibility to victims (Deitz, Blackwell, Daley, & Bentley, 1982;Foley & Pigott, 2000;see Brekke & Borgida, 1988, for a review). A similar pattern of results is noted in the literature for child victims of sexual violence, in that female jurors, compared to male jurors, tend to make more pro-victim case decisions with respect to credibility, responsibility, or guilt judgments (Bottoms, 1993;Bottoms, Davis, & Epstein, 2004;Bottoms & Goodman, 1994;Crowley, O'Gallaghan, & Ball, 1994;Golding, Sanchez, & Sego, 1997Golding, Sego, Sanchez, & Hasemann, 1995;McCauley & Parker, 2001;Quas, Goodman, & Jones, 2003;Schmidt & Brigham, 1996; for a meta-analytic review, see Schutte & Hosch, 1997). Whether such a gender effect also would be observed in an SVP mock jury paradigm with a child victim has never been tested.…”